The Fox network on Monday unveiled a fall lineup that features three new shows, a night of pro wrestling and the final season of “Empire.”

The announcements came as part of “upfront week,” an annual, hype-filled ritual in New York City, during which the broadcast networks roll out their fresh inventory for advertisers.

The network said that “Empire,” once a juggernaut hit, will return for its sixth and final season. The show will also shift from Wednesdays to Tuesdays, where it will be paired with the also-relocated “The Resident.”

The sixth season of the hip-hop drama will likely go on without cast member Jussie Smollett, who was infamously accused of faking a hate-crime attack on himself in Chicago, where the show is filmed. He maintains he is innocent and a series of criminal charges against him were dropped. Fox chief Charlie Collier told reporters that the network has an option to have Smollett appear in the series, “but there are no plans at this point” to do so.

The new schedule is Fox’s first since its separation from 20th Century Fox Television, which was purchased by Disney,

Fall newcomers include “Not Just Me,” starring Brittany Snow as an only child who discovers that her father (Timothy Hutton), a pioneering fertility doctor, used his own sperm to conceive upwards of a hundred children, including two new sisters.

The other new shows are “Prodigal Son,” a “darkly comedic” drama starring Tom Payne as the son of a convicted serial killer (Michael Sheen) who has made hunting murderers his life work, and the animated series “Bless the Harts,” about a Southern family struggling to make ends meet.

Fox is also betting big on wrestling, devoting Friday nights in the fall to “WWE’s SmackDown Live.” That means the Tim Allen sitcom, “Last Man Standing,” will be held back for midseason. Other midseason shows include “The Orville,” and a “9-1-1” spin-off starring Rob Lowe.

Also of note: “The Masked Singer,” a huge reality hit for Fox this past winter, will be part of the fall schedule, airing at 8 p.m. on Wednesdays. And Fox clearly has no fears of wearing out the gimmick, planning to debut a second edition of “The Masked Singer” right after next year’s Super Bowl.

To make room for the new fare, Fox has axed “The Cool Kids,” “Rel,” “The Passage” and “Proven Innocent,” along with “Gotham,” “The Gifted” and “Star.”